Showing posts with label Meditation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Meditation. Show all posts

Friday, June 22, 2007

The Power of Meditation in Our Journey Through Life

  • Do you sometimes feel scattered?
  • Are you anxious about many things?
  • Do you have questions about your purpose and your mission in life?
  • Would you like to become more grounded, focused and relaxed?
  • Do you have a desire to feel more connected on a soul level?
  • Are you concerned about your overall state of health?
  • Do you feel as though something is missing?

If your answer is yes to any of these questions – perhaps meditation would be a good discipline for you to embrace.

Meditation has been practiced for thousands of years in all walks of life and in numerous spiritual disciplines. There are no boundaries to this age-old discipline. There are many different ways to practice meditation. Whatever method you choose the benefits are similar. There are basically three components that meditation affects: Mental/Emotional, Physical and Spiritual.


Mental/Emotional

Meditation will give you more mental clarity and the ability to see and perceive things as they really are. You will begin to feel less anxious about issues that previously caused you stress. As you become calmer you will find that you listen better and have more patience, becoming more tolerant of other people’s actions and circumstances over which you have no control. The new calm that you experience will also enable you to be detached from any outcome. The mental and emotional well being alone is more than enough reason to take up meditation. But there is more.


Physical

Meditation will also affect your physical well being
. It has been documented that meditation helps lower blood pressure; it slows down breathing and the heart rate. Meditation boosts your immune system, supports healing of many illnesses, especially chronic illnesses, and helps relieve pain and suffering. It has even been known to improve survival in persons with cancer. Because meditation helps the body to function in a calmer state it reduces the stress on adrenal glands, reducing negative hormones, thus improving the function of positive hormones and slowing down the aging process.

It has been shown that over time
you will be drawn to a healthier lifestyle, - better diet, more exercise and also eliminating habits that are contradictory to good health such as smoking and excessive use of alcohol. As you understand the benefits for your physical well being I trust you are being drawn to this discipline of meditation. But there is even more.


Spiritual

The spiritual benefits, in my humble opinion, are the most profound, as this is the dimension of you that underscores every aspect of your being. We are all spiritual beings having a human experience. As you begin to practice the discipline of meditation you will begin to notice heightened awareness of your inner Self - the discovery of your true being. You will become aware of a peace of mind that previously you did not think was possible. You will have a deeper sense of being “Present”, of being in the “Now”.

The practice of meditation will aid you in being grounded and focused and you will become aware of a connectedness, on a soul-level, with people you come in contact. Questions you have had in the past about your purpose, or your mission in life will begin to have answers and you will desire a more purposeful direction in your life. Over time your life will begin to improve in ways that in the beginning you could only dream.

I encourage you to begin your own practice of meditation. Though meditation is not a panacea for all of life’s challenges, it is a powerful tool to support us as we go through life.

Businesswoman, Friend, Collaborator, and Team player, Amy Huentelman fulfills her Entrepreneurial Calling by offering a great service that enriches the lives of others. Together with other fellow BraveHeart Community members, her goal is to empower Women to be multi-dimensional success stories and inspiration to others. Be Sure to Visit: Be a BraveHeart Woman

Saturday, June 9, 2007

Meditation

These days people seek knowledge, not wisdom. Knowledge is of the past, wisdom is of the future. - Vernon Cooper

Two hundred years ago, collecting information was the name of the game. The world was ruled by those who mastered the skills of information gathering. Knowledge was power.

In today's world, the TV world, the world of live broadcasts, of information at your fingertips, a fast track world loaded with information, the advantage changed sides. Today, the world belongs to those who master the regulation of the flow of information. Today, it's not how much you know but how effective you are at finding what you need in the overwhelming rush of new facts coming straight at you from all around.

When I started my teaching journey, believing that all the people around the world were gifted, I faced a dilemma. As a person who brought information collection to a level of art, I was actually giving my students the greatest disadvantage of the 21st century. I was guiding them to where "they couldn't see the forest for the trees."

After I realised this, I spent years looking for the balance between collecting and regulating. Everything around us encourages collecting. At school, we learn how to gather and process information for our assignments, but not how to handle the enormous stream of information we absorb anyway.

Imagine that your brain is an office, where every piece of information is like the people seeking your service or incoming messages requiring your processing and filing.

Most of the processing happens while you're a sleep. The more information you receive, the more time it takes you to process it. Have you noticed that when you're stressed you feel tired? Have you noticed that kids sleep much more than adults do? That's because the load of information they need to process is greater - almost everything is new.

Because the world moved into "fast forward," we receive information that is much greater than twenty years ago. To realise this, think about kids. Their knowledge nowadays is diverse and they know much more than what their parents knew at the same age. Gifted children, for example, have very superior collection channels. They can collect a lot of information at any given time.

Unfortunately, not long after, the child will have loads of information without the time to process and the "clerk" in the "office" will scream, "That's it. Too much input. I can't handle this any more," and the child will feel overload and pressure. A simple thing like walking in the street stimulates a lot of incoming mail. The colours, the faces, the conversation of the couple you've just seen, the traffic jam and the smell and taste of the apples you bought in the supermarket. All this input is processed and stored for later use. When you are absorbing all this, seemingly without an effort, you brain is working overtime to process and you might feel stressed without being able to pinpoint the reason.

A lot has been said about the ways to regulate this overload. Stress management actually tackles this from different angles. One way to handle stress is to try to divert our attention from the thing we consider the problem, where in fact we don't have any idea which information is sorted while we are asleep. The clerk processes the information as he sees fit without us having the conscious ability to control it. An example of diverting the attention for the supposedly a stress source, is the attempt to divert kids' attention from academic stimulants and encourage them to move into sports, art or music. This attempt only oils their superior machine and, instead of filtering out information, they open new channels of input as if the clerk now opened new doors to his office.

Another method to overcome stress is to avoid dealing with some of the issues. Some people prefer the ostrich approach but are not aware of the fact that the office is open to the public as long as they're awake. Every minute you are not asleep, your office is receiving input. Sleep is just the way your clerk is working quietly with no disturbance. Has it happened to you that you wanted to stay at work after hours, when no one was around, so you can do the job without disturbance.

Meditation is one of the best ways to regulate the incoming flow of information. In our model, meditation is like hanging a sign on the door, which says, "Away from the office. Back in 20 minutes." During this time, we allow our clerk to file the information without letting any new information to come in. Mediation research shows that it's being neither asleep nor awake. It's a state between the two, in which the brain is very calm, yet very sharp.

My first encounter with meditation was when my inspiring sister, 16 years old at the time, went to study Transcendental Mediation. I remember her taking time off, closing her eyes and sitting still for a while. She looked a bit ridiculous, but she was brilliant at every thing she did.

My first meditation experience happened when Gal and I went to study all kinds of meditation - affirmation, light, sound, eating, dancing, walking, mantra and visualisation. It was fun! I remember coming back home dead tired from meditation class, remembering that our instructor said, "Your body knows exactly what it needs. Listen to it. You probably need to sleep."

Some time afterwards, I was working in Texas with a group of 2-year-old toddlers that used to wreak havoc during sleep time, so the centre had to reorganise the place and bring 10 adults to put them to sleep. The grownups sat there tapping the kids' backs and patting their heads for an hour and a half, until the last one fell asleep. In our staff meeting, I suggested to introduce visualisation. Familiar? "Close your eyes and imagine you are on a soft cloud, like cotton." We decided to try it for a month and reassess. On the first day, the last staff member left after 45 minutes. On the third day, they left after 10 minutes. The kids were still fully awake, relaxed, but with their eyes closed. At that time, we introduced soft meditation music in the background for an hour and a half. After a successful week, we felt we were ready to hand control over to the kids (remember, they were only two years old). We put the music on, "floated" for 3 minutes on our soft cotton cloud and then we asked them to take a deep breath and count one, two, three, one two, three. This way, within two weeks, we had 15 meditating toddlers, relaxed and saving the expensive resources of 10 extra staff members. You can imagine how happy the centre management, the parents and the teachers were.

When we moved to Melbourne, Gal and I registered for a Transcendental Mediation course. Our instructor suggested we bring the kids along. It sounded funny, because they were only 4 and 10 years old. I remember her asking us what kind of improvements we would like to see in the kids. We looked at each other, not knowing what to answer. They were perfect kids - friendly, flexible, curious, smart, loving and understanding. We went there every evening for a week, watched some videos and learned to mediate. After 4 days, Gal got really sick, so Marg, our instructor, gave him 3 tea bags and told him to drink them during the day. She told him his body was adjusting. Like magic, he got up the day after, healthy and alert. About a month later, our perfect little son started drumming on everything. We had to look all around town to find someone who was willing to teach percussions to a 4-year-old. Ivan, bless his soul, taught him only because he himself started learning at the age of 4. After 4 weeks, Tsoof was so advanced that we had to send Gal with him, so he could help him at home with his practice. Within a year, he had 4 different drum teachers teaching him different styles and he started playing with adults, because there wasn't any children group at his level. We believe the mediation was the main reason for this.

So now in our house, every health issue is solved in this order:

  1. Drink plenty of water
  2. Take vitamin C
  3. Meditate
  4. Sleep
And you know what? This works for most things.

In Transcendental Mediation, people meditate with a mantra. Children until the age of 10 can mediate for 5 minutes with their eyes open any time they wish. From the age of 10, they start meditating for the number of minutes equal to their age, until they turn 20. They just hang up the sign "I'm on break. Back in 10 minutes," twice a day. Every mediation session is considered equivalent to two hours of sleep and there you have it - people full of energy and focused who efficiently use another 4 hours of collecting information. Six years after our kids started meditating, we can tell by their behaviour whether they hanged the "on break" sign this week or not. Meditation doesn't prevent the information from entering. It only regulates the incoming flow to allow more information to come in.

In a world full of information, a world of many words, many people, loads of feelings, lots of noise and visions, the name of the game is quiet.

Many people are afraid they don't do it well because they still think of things while meditating. Remember, the goal in mediation is not to clear the brain from thought but to prevent new input from entering your office. Thinking during mediation is natural. In time, you feel much more relaxed, focused, energetic and happy.

If two hundred years ago all we wanted was more knowledge, then today our best asset is a sign, which says on one side "on break" to allow cleaning the head and on its other side, for when we've restored our energy, "open to public!"

To view the original article and/or subscribe to the Be Happy in LIFE newsletter, visit www.behappyinlife.com/inspiration.

Ronit Baras is an educator, a journalist and a life coach, specializing in relationships and emotional intelligence. She has 21 years of education experience, working with children, teenagers and parents. She's the author of the book "Be Special, Be Yourself for Teenagers". Ronit has lived and worked in America, Asia and Australia and now lives in Brisbane.

Ronit's purpose in life is to spread love and acceptance all over the world through article writing, book publishing, public speaking, education and coaching.